An acceptance of Humes assertion that effects are not necessarily or even reasonably 'caused' precludes a subsequent reliance upon the 'scientific method' as a methodology towards 'preference.' It merely encourages particular types of preferences and subsequent hypothesis. — Marcus de Brun
The basis for this knowledge is the scientific method, which if flawed (as it is) would mean that your use of the word knowledge might be revised to that of 'hypothesis'? — Marcus de Brun
One makes an assertion, and another accepts or rejects an assertion?An acceptance of an assertion? — tom
I don't wish to be pedantic, but are you in any way familiar with Popper? — tom
And, yes, we actually do know what causes the sun to shine. — tom
One makes an assertion, and another accepts or rejects an assertion? — Marcus de Brun
Conscious selfhood emerges because of, and not in spite of, our beast machine nature.
I predict, therefore I am.
It's a great video because he does some really eye-popping live demonstrations and reviews our current state of experimental knowledge on the issue. Seth considers the "hard problem" too metaphysical, so he says he's more interested in finding and categorizing the neural correlates of conscious states. — Uber
Seth is not suggesting that consciousness is caused exclusively by neurons. He would say that consciousness emerges from the dynamical interactions between the brain, the body, and the rest of the world. The exact mechanisms are still under study. — Uber
TomAnyway, the important thing is that Popper solves Hume's "Problem of Induction" with his Scientific Method, and that knowledge of causes is indeed possible, and always fallible. — tom
Hence, neuroplasticity?The water can sends signal beyond the fixed hardware; induce organic changes. — wellwisher
How so?This aspect of the physics borders on the metaphysical. — wellwisher
Where can I read more about this idea, or related ideas?The main problem is the biological sciences do not give water enough credit in terms of its contribution to life...The result of not stressing water enough is the life science tends to fixate on the brain using the assumptions of the solid state; organic structures. The water adds liquid state parameters which adds features not found in solid state models like computers. — Wellwisher
Details like this ,,, Given:One of the greatest neuroscientists of our time, Antonio Damasio, holds the view that consciousness is an emergent state. The following article from MIT gives a quick rundown of his theories.
The Importance of Feelings
I think variations of these views are now widely accepted in neuroscience. In another debate on this forum I cited several books by prominent neuroscientists saying that it's basically impossible to maintain dualism while pretending to care about reality. Materialism has already won. Now it's matter of filling in some (very important) details. — Uber
If you agree that the Hard Problem is not solved then you must agree that we are no closer to understanding Consciousness now than 100 years ago. The Hard Problem was not a coined phrase back then but they had the basic idea that Neural Activity leads to Conscious experience. Today we know a vast amount more about the Neural Activity (Neural Correlates of Consciousness) but in spite of that we know zero about how this Neural Activity causes Conscious experiences. We don't even know what any Conscious experience really is. We only know we experience it.I never claimed that the hard problem was solved. In fact I have been very explicit that it has not been solved. But only deliberate ignorance can be the reasom for claiming that we are no less closer to understanding consciousness than we were 100 years ago. — Uber
Today we know a vast amount more about the Neural Activity (Neural Correlates of Consciousness) but in spite of that we know zero about how this Neural Activity causes Conscious experiences. — SteveKlinko
In the fountain analogy of consciousness, via neurons, the entropic force is at work as ions shift between the two sides of the membrane; neurotransmitters induce variable permeability, transmitting entropic signals through the water; inside and outside the neuron.
To know how this works and impacts the organics, you need to understand the nature of hydrogen bonding. This takes time to develop, so I will do this another time. — wellwisher
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